Caribbean people speak more than one language because they could have moved from Spain to the Caribbean or they could have had ancestors that spoke the language they speak.
EX. You went to the Caribbean island and met two people who seemed very nice. One spoke Spanish, he was from Mexico. The other one spoke Japanese. He was from Japan. The Japanese person translated, "I moved from Japan to the Caribbean four years ago." The Mexican person translated, "My grandmother was from Mexico and I learned the language from her."
There are many other ways that people of the Caribbean speak more than one language.
Caribbean people speak more than one language due to historical influences from colonial powers like Spain, France, England, and the Netherlands. This has contributed to linguistic diversity in the region, with many Caribbean people being multilingual as a result of these historical connections.
Roughly 28 million people speak Tagalog as their first language, with many more speaking it as a second language in the Philippines.
Approximately 341 million people speak Hindi as their first language, primarily in India. It is also spoken by millions more as a second language around the world.
People who speak more than one language are called bilingual if they speak two languages, trilingual if they speak three languages, and so on.
Approximately 97% of the population in Spain speak Spanish as their primary language.
A person who can speak more than one language is called a polyglot.
More people speak Mandarin than any other language. More places speak English than any other language.
More than 90% of people in Spain speak Spanish. There is no language in Spain that is spoken by only 75% of the population.
Roughly 28 million people speak Tagalog as their first language, with many more speaking it as a second language in the Philippines.
More people speak Spanish as a native tongue (first language) than English, but more people speak English as a second or third or fourth language than Spanish.
Approximately 341 million people speak Hindi as their first language, primarily in India. It is also spoken by millions more as a second language around the world.
Chinese has second greatest number of people who speak it, after English. (Note: While more people speak Chinese primarily than those who primarily speak English, more have English as a primary or secondary language than have Chinese as a primary or secondary language.)
Actually most people in Europe, not just Switzerland, speak more than one language, in fact most countries in the world are that way. America is the weird one in that most Americans speak only one language.
People who speak more than one language are called bilingual if they speak two languages, trilingual if they speak three languages, and so on.
Approximately 97% of the population in Spain speak Spanish as their primary language.
If you can only speak one language that's fine because it suits the environment that you live in but if you speak more than one language that's even better because you can speak to foreign people and will be able to speak a particular language when you go to a different country.
A person who can speak more than one language is called a polyglot.
Of course they speak other languages. Don't you know people in your country who speak more than one language.